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61 сжиматься
1) General subject: become clenched, boil down, collapse, contract, contractor, cower (от страха, холода), cringe (от страха), huddle, scringe (от страха), shrink, shrink away, shrink up, tighten, gather up, shrink at a touch, hunch3) Medicine: coarctate4) Colloquial: curl (от ужаса)5) Engineering: constrict6) Automobile industry: draw7) Scottish language: crine8) Information technology: condense -
62 скручиваться
1) General subject: convolve, crook, intertwine, intertwist, kink, curl up (от мороза, жары), hunch2) Geology: warp3) Medicine: rotate4) Engineering: twist5) Railway term: buckle6) Physics: interwine7) Oil: curl8) Makarov: corkscrew, crumple (о полипептидной цепочке), curl (о чайном листе), curl up -
63 скрючиваться
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64 скрючиться
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65 смутное предчувствие
General subject: vague hunchУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > смутное предчувствие
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66 согнуть
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67 согнуться
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68 ссутулиться
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69 сутулить
General subject: hump, hunch (часто h up), stoop -
70 сутулиться
1) General subject: hunch, poke head, poke one's head, slouch, slump, stoop, stoop shoulders, walk with a stoop, have a slouch2) Makarov: hump the back, hump up the back -
71 съёживаться
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72 толкать
1) General subject: bump, bunt, dig, elbow, force somebody's hand (на что-либо), hustle, impel, induce, ivy, jab, job, jog, joggle, jostle, leg, poke, poke down, poke up, press, press down, prod, prompt, propel, punch (палкой), puncher (палкой), push, shoulder (ся), shove, shover, spirit (на что-л. - on), spur, thrust, urge on, push against, hunch2) Sports: put4) Construction: cant6) Jargon: boff, oontz, sling (sling crack rock or get a wicked jump shot - Чтобы подняться, ты либо толкаешь дурь, либо недурно забиваешь мяч.), deep six, spill7) Mechanics: jar9) Makarov: determine, push aside, push back, push down, dig in, dig into, force hand (на что-л.) -
73 толкаться
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74 толстый кусок
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75 толчок
1) General subject: bob, boon, buffet, bunt, butt, cant, clean and jerk, concussion, dig, dig up, fillip, flick, hit, hitch, hoick, ictus, impact, impulse, impulsion, ivy, jab, jerk, job, jog, jolt, jostle, jounce, jumble, jump off, kick, lunge, momentas, poke, prod, prog, propulsion, pulse, pulsion, push, push off, shock, shove, start, stir, stirrer, take off, thrust, toss, urge, wap, yerk, burst, impetus, momentum, stimulus, motive2) Geology: forerunners, shake3) Naval: jolting, projection, pusher6) Sports: jump-off, push-off, repulsion, take-off, thrust against the horse8) Rare: illision9) General subject: toilet10) Railway term: slam12) Polygraphy: jerk (при пуске печатной машины)13) Jargon: charge, whack, flea market (Russian slang), john (US English slang for toilet), crapper (US slang for toilet), lav (short for lavatory), bog (slang for toilet)14) Oil: percussion, surge, tremor16) Graphic expression: jump start (The fact that such initiatives have been very limited suggests they need a jump-start.)17) Mechanics: impact shock18) Automation: jogging20) Makarov: beat (сердечный), bump (тока), burst (ионизации), incitement, kick (ногой, копытом), shock (при землетрясении и т.п.) -
76 у меня такое предчувствие (что ...)
General subject: I have a hunchУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > у меня такое предчувствие (что ...)
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77 футеровочная плита мельницы
Oil: hunch plateУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > футеровочная плита мельницы
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78 что-то мне подсказывает
General subject: I have a hunchУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > что-то мне подсказывает
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79 шлаковая яма
2) Metallurgy: cinder fall, cinder pit, roughing hole -
80 его озарило
General subject: (вдруг) he had a hunch
См. также в других словарях:
Hunch — Hunch, n. [Perh. akin to huckle; cf. hump, hunch, bunch, hunk.] 1. A hump; a protuberance. [1913 Webster] 2. A lump; a thick piece; as, a hunch of bread. [1913 Webster] 3. A push or thrust, as with the elbow. [1913 Webster] 4. A strong, intuitive … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hunch — /hunch/, v.t. 1. to thrust out or up in a hump; arch: to hunch one s back. 2. to shove, push, or jostle. v.i. 3. to thrust oneself forward jerkily; lunge forward. 4. to stand, sit, or walk in a bent posture. n. 5. a premonition or suspicion;… … Universalium
Hunch — Hunch, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Hunched}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Hunching}.] 1. To push or jostle with the elbow; to push or thrust suddenly. [1913 Webster] 2. To thrust out a hump or protuberance; to crook, as the back. Dryden. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Hunch — may refer to:* An intuitive reckoning * A forward bend in one s body, such as that from a crushed vertebra * A parody of Derryn Hinch played by Steve Vizard on Australian television show Fast Forward * A Dance attributed to Hasil Adkins * The… … Wikipedia
hunch — [n] feeling, idea anticipation, apprehension, auguration, augury, boding, clue, expectation, feeling in one’s bones*, foreboding, forecast, foreknowledge, forewarning, forewisdom, funny feeling*, glimmer, hint, impression, inkling, instinct,… … New thesaurus
hunch — [hunch] vt. [< ?] to draw (one s body, etc.) up so as to form a hump; arch into a hump vi. 1. to move forward jerkily; push; shove 2. to sit or stand with the back arched n. 1. a hump 2. a chunk; lump; hunk ☆ 3 … English World dictionary
hunch — index premonition Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
hunch — originally (c.1500) a verb, to push, thrust, of unknown origin. Meaning raise or bend into a hump is 1670s. Perhaps a variant of bunch. The noun is attested from 1620s, originally a push, thrust. Figurative sense of hint, tip (a push toward a… … Etymology dictionary
hunch — ► VERB ▪ raise (one s shoulders) and bend the top of one s body forward. ► NOUN ▪ a feeling or guess based on intuition. ORIGIN originally meaning «push, shove»: of unknown origin … English terms dictionary
hunch — n. (colloq.) feeling suspicion 1) to play a hunch ( to act on the basis of a hunch ) 2) a hunch that (I have a hunch that she will not come) 3) on a hunch (she did it on a hunch) * * * [hʌntʃ] (colloq.) [ feeling ] [ suspicion ] to play a hunch ( … Combinatory dictionary
hunch — hunch1 [hʌntʃ] n if you have a hunch that something is true or will happen, you feel that it is true or will happen →↑suspicion have a hunch (that) ▪ I had a hunch that something like this would happen. sb s hunch ▪ My hunch is that she s his… … Dictionary of contemporary English